A new type of black pudding

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matchmaker

Original Poster:

8,490 posts

200 months

Thursday 16th April 2015
quotequote all
Venison:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-scotland-bus...

Beeb said:
A Scottish firm is to launch venison black pudding on the market, following taste trials by food scientists.

Perth-based Seriously Good Venison will start selling the product via its website and at farmers' markets in the central belt from the beginning of May.
smilelick

Tickle

4,915 posts

204 months

Thursday 16th April 2015
quotequote all
matchmaker said:
Venison:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-scotland-bus...

Beeb said:
A Scottish firm is to launch venison black pudding on the market, following taste trials by food scientists.

Perth-based Seriously Good Venison will start selling the product via its website and at farmers' markets in the central belt from the beginning of May.
smilelick
I bloody love black pudding!


soad

32,891 posts

176 months

Friday 17th April 2015
quotequote all
Tickle said:
I bloody love black pudding!
In Norway it is known as blodpølse; the French have boudin noir; morcilla is served in Latin America and Spain; and kashanka in Poland.

This black pudding salad looks good enough to convert a few vegetarians (and vegans). wink


DUMBO100

1,878 posts

184 months

Friday 17th April 2015
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I had venison haggis at The Ubiquitous Chip on Monday. It was very good

guindilias

5,245 posts

120 months

Friday 17th April 2015
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Hmm. Would cooked deer blood really be all that different from cooked pig blood?
Can't see it being much more than a gimmick.

vixen1700

22,893 posts

270 months

Friday 17th April 2015
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http://www.perfickpork.co.uk/shop/sausages/black-p...

Bought some of these recently at a food fair and have to say, they are very nice indeed. Bit apprehensive at first, mind. hehe

rdjohn

6,176 posts

195 months

Friday 17th April 2015
quotequote all
guindilias said:
Hmm. Would cooked deer blood really be all that different from cooked pig blood?
Can't see it being much more than a gimmick.
This was my immediate thought. I believe that flavour is mainly in the fat rather than lean meat, so that would tend to rule lean venison out for a start.

My favourite black-pudding is Morcillas de Burgos. They tend to contain rice and spices rather than onion and are not fatty at all. I think that the blood is really only a binding agent - coagulation causing the pudding to set. Rick Stein showed them being made on his BBC Spanish trip in a VW Camper Van.

haggishunter

1,315 posts

243 months

Friday 17th April 2015
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matchmaker said:
smilelick
What's the cost, is it deer?

getmecoat

condor

8,837 posts

248 months

Friday 17th April 2015
quotequote all
guindilias said:
Hmm. Would cooked deer blood really be all that different from cooked pig blood?
Can't see it being much more than a gimmick.
My thought too - but I will wait till I try some.


ssray

1,101 posts

225 months

Saturday 18th April 2015
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I`m having pork and black pudding sausage`s this morning at work, local stourbridge butcher

andyb28

767 posts

118 months

Saturday 18th April 2015
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Mmm, I can't wait to try this. Guess its just a case of keeping an eye on this website http://www.seriouslygoodvenison.co.uk/

On a slightly different note, when I was in Lapland, I had reindeer burgers and reindeer kebab. The kebab was one of the best things I have ever tasted.

PositronicRay

27,010 posts

183 months

Saturday 18th April 2015
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I tried venison burgers, a bit dry actually.

NormalWisdom

2,139 posts

159 months

Friday 24th April 2015
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Bought some "slicing haggis" last weekend in Coventry market - Made a surprisingly pleasant change to Black Pudding with my Sunday fry....